Traumatic bonding
Traumatic bonding (Abuse, Mind_control/Child_Abuse, Manipulation) | |
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paradox dependency reaction due to victim's evoked care-seeking behavior |
Traumatic bonding may be defined as Stockholm syndrome (dependency on and hatred of destructive others or ideologies, i.e. cults) caused by a malignant caretaking figure, either primary (mother), secondary (father), or any substitutes thereof, including cult leaders, medical professionals (organizations and institutions may substitute for primary family) in conditions of extreme stress.
- Full article: Mind_control/Child_Abuse
- Full article: Mind_control/Child_Abuse
Traumatic bonding may cause splitting, a psychological defense (sometimes later in life used for offensive purposes [1] ) characterized by black-and-white-thinking or polarizing beliefs, objects and circumstances into unconciliatory all-good and all-bad images, which may contribute to dissociative symptoms (split consciousness, trance, hypnosis, heightened suggestibility, simulation and deception).
It is typical of severe personality disorders, including psychopaths or reaction to being subjected their manipulations (i.e "team splitting"). Traumatic bonding is fostered by isolation from healthy resources, such as friends, peers and uncertainty, i.e. unpredictable attacks, threats, imminent disasters or inconsistent reward and punishment for similar behavior (see learned helplessness).
References
- ↑ Kernberg, Otto F., M.D. (1992). Aggression in Personality Disorders and Perversions. New Haven: Yale University Press. (First both dependency (subservience) and hatred may serve to eliminate pain but became useful, later in life, to eliminate obstacles to gratification).